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Peru School Raises Guinea Pigs for Eating


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#1 dusty

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Posted 21 October 2004 - 06:36 PM

Read this in today's papers. I didn't know that guinea pigs can be eaten. So sad! :crybuckets:

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...peru_guinea_pig

Peru School Raises Guinea Pigs for Eating

Tue Oct 19, 5:09 PM ET

By RICK VECCHIO, Associated Press Writer

LIMA, Peru - After 34 years of patient tinkering, researchers at Peru's most prestigious agrarian university have bred a new culinary export they hope will scamper onto dinner plates throughout America and the world: the super guinea pig.

The animal is a cuddly companion for millions of children in the United States. But in Peru, the rodent's birthplace, it remains a vital source of protein in rural communities, a mainstay of Andean folk medicine and a common religious sacrifice to the gods.

"It is well known that Peruvians eat guinea pig. Foreigners are more reluctant to eat it as they see the animal as a pet," said Gloria Palacios, director of La Molina National University's project to promote guinea pig exports.

"I think if they become familiar with the cuisine, maybe suddenly they'll give in and be tempted to try it," she said. "It is really delicious."

Peruvians consume an estimated 65 million guinea pigs each year. It is a dining experience that normally requires two hands to pick scant, sinewy meat from a bony carcass — often with the head staring up from the plate.

But earlier this year, La Molina university started exporting the "Peruvian Breed" — faster growing, plumper, tastier guinea pigs — to the United States, Japan and several European nations that have large Peruvian immigrant populations.

The 1,000 guinea pigs shipped out weekly — mostly to the United States — each weigh nearly 2 1/2 pounds, said Dr. Lilia Chauca, head researcher of the breeding project.

In comparison, she said, the guinea pigs raised on alfalfa and vegetable peels in nearly every rural Andean household weigh between 10 1/2 ounces to 1 1/2 pounds.

The meat is high in protein and low in fat and cholesterol and has a distinctive flavor, similar to rabbit. Chauca and her team of researchers at La Molina's National Institute of Agrarian Investigation started the super-size guinea pig project in 1970.

Archaeological evidence shows guinea pigs were domesticated in Peru as far back as 2500 B.C., and had deep cultural and religious significance. Guinea pigs are still a common tool of ritual healers, or "curanderos," who use the animals to diagnose illnesses.

A 17th century native chronicler, Guaman Poma de Ayala, wrote that the Incas sacrificed 1,000 white guinea pigs along with 100 llamas in Cuzco's main plaza each July "so that neither the sun nor the waters would harm the food and the fields."

From the beginning of the Spanish colonization, the Catholic Church brutally suppressed Indian religious icons. But the guinea pig was spared.

Geronimo de Loayza, the first bishop of Lima from 1545 to 1575, refused a request by Spanish priests to order the mass extermination of the rodents, fearing it would spark a rebellion.

The Spanish colonizers made Indian artists paint, weave and carve items with Catholic themes to decorate churches and evangelize the natives. The artists copied prints imported from Europe, but added Peruvian touches.

Today, churches in Lima and Cuzco still display Indian depictions of the Last Supper with Jesus and the 12 disciples eating roasted guinea pig.

Posted Image

A super guinea pig with her litter looks on at Agrarian University in Lima, Peru on Friday, Oct. 15, 2004. After 34 years of patient tinkering, researchers at Peru's most prestigious agrarian university have bred a new culinary export they hope will scamper onto dinner plates throughout America and the world: the super guinea pig. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)






#2 wiffy

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Posted 21 October 2004 - 08:14 PM

my colleague showed me this article today. it made me so sad

#3 50,000_tears

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Posted 21 October 2004 - 08:18 PM

AHH! im not takin my cuzin and her guinea pig to peru thye would eat lil cinaminy which i wouldent want cuz i like guinea piggys!

#4 nana shansky

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Posted 22 October 2004 - 02:48 AM

wow, that is horrible! I can't imagine eating a guinea pig, it would be way to horrible! :mad: I just couldn't do it! :worried: but, it is their culture, and if that is what they practice then so be it. :yes: they probably look at our cultures and say some are disgusting. But breeding animals to eat them is so sad, especially since they are so cute. Wow, this is just what they do to chickens, cows, and pigs in america. I have a sudden urge to become vegitarian. That is so sad. :shy:

#5 Kelly_Bear

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Posted 22 October 2004 - 02:54 AM

awww!thats sad :crybuckets: i just couldnt do it...

#6 Charmer

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Posted 22 October 2004 - 03:14 AM

Heh, if they(The people who are reasearching Guinea pigs as food) think anyone is going to eat guinea pig over here, they need to be tested for drug use. That makes most people in countries like the U.S., and places where HH members live, sick. "It it really delicious" yeah right! People in one country, have different tastes than people in other countries.
When you grow up eating steak and hamburgers, you don't want to step down to eating rodent meat. Rodents are better in your hands, not your stomachs! Poor little guineas! It's like eating a pet, a famlily member. You wouldn't eat your friends or your kids would you?

#7 Mr. Bobo

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Posted 22 October 2004 - 04:48 AM

Well, you know, Charmer, think about what nana shansky said. They would probably say the same about us.

#8 SouthPaw

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Posted 22 October 2004 - 06:10 AM

I couldn't even finish reading that.... :worried:

Poor little Guinea Pigs. :guilty:

#9 squeeky

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Posted 22 October 2004 - 06:27 AM

that's horrible!!! :shocked:

how could they eat something so cute?

#10 Nelson

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Posted 22 October 2004 - 04:31 PM

....that is sad...i know that Peruvians eat guinea pigs/sacrifices....but making americans do so....its so sad

#11 bru

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Posted 24 October 2004 - 10:03 AM

ohh.... hm.. how come my news so un-updated? i only saw this today (sunday) ..

actually, to think of it another way.. we also eat chickens and ducks...so maybe to other cultures eating guinea pigs and modifying their sizes are acceptable...
just cant accept it yet. :(

and i also cant bear eating rabbit meat...

#12 Nelson

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Posted 24 October 2004 - 10:47 AM

...yeah...i know, you know chinese? we eat pigeons ok but other ppl like europians dont accept it....

But maybe if we dont think of it, maybe it will be better.

#13 nicesushi

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Posted 26 October 2004 - 01:12 PM

i've seen something like that on a website, selling hamsters as snacks online. there is dog meat too. cruel aren't they.

#14 Nelson

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Posted 26 October 2004 - 02:46 PM

there is dog meat too

In china/korea/Japan, they eat dog meat too...and rodents...sad to us, but think of it this way. I eat sharkfin, other people would think of it yuck, like Peruvians eating Guinea Pigs, but it seems perfectly fine to me....

What would Muslims's think of us eating Pork?..

BUT the above post (newspaper) is sad bcs that they want Americans to eat too...now that i disagree

[edited for an error....]

Edited by Nelson, 26 October 2004 - 03:43 PM.


#15 50,000_tears

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Posted 26 October 2004 - 08:01 PM

all i know is my cuzins pet would not taste good....Musilums dont eat pork? do you mean Jewish?